What is emergency tax?
Emergency tax is a temporary tax situation where your employer must deduct higher tax because they do not yet have the correct Revenue instructions for your employment.
This often happens when:
- You start a new job
- You return to work after unemployment
- Your employer has not yet received your Revenue Payroll Notification (RPN)
- Your PPS number was entered incorrectly
- Your employment was not registered properly with Revenue
Why are the deductions so high?
When Revenue has not yet confirmed your tax credits and tax band, your employer must temporarily apply emergency tax rules.
This can result in:
- Higher PAYE deductions
- Reduced or missing tax credits
- Lower take-home pay
Emergency tax usually appears as unusually high PAYE deductions on your payslip.
How to fix emergency tax
In most cases, emergency tax can be fixed online through Revenue myAccount.
You usually need to:
- Log into Revenue myAccount
- Add or confirm your employment details
- Make sure your PPS number is correct
- Assign your tax credits to the correct employer
Will you get the money back?
Usually yes.
Once your tax details are corrected, any overpaid PAYE is often refunded automatically through payroll.
In some cases, the refund may appear:
- In your next payslip
- Across several payslips
- Through a Revenue refund later in the year
Simple example
| Situation | Result |
|---|---|
| New employee starts work | Employer has no Revenue payroll details yet |
| Emergency tax applied | Higher PAYE deducted temporarily |
| Revenue details updated | Tax corrected and refund issued |
What is the difference between PAYE, USC, and PRSI?
PAYE, USC, and PRSI are all deductions that may appear on your Irish payslip, but they each serve different purposes.
| Deduction | What it is | What the money is used for |
|---|---|---|
| PAYE | Income tax | General government spending and public services |
| USC | Universal Social Charge | Additional state funding for public finances and services |
| PRSI | Social insurance contribution | Benefits such as the State Pension, Jobseeker’s Benefit, and Illness Benefit |